Although he claimed that colleges and universities were accepting his students within
10 years after he founded the school, W.N. Ferris was continuously trying to get his
credits accepted as college preparatory credits. He was too busy with his new building
and his school to do much about it in 1894, but after he issued his first catalog
in 1894, he began a campaign to induce institutions of higher education to consider
his students as acceptable for entrance in their schools and that Institute credits
should be accepted on face value.

In the beginning, Ferris wrote personal letters to the presidents of the universities
recommending students for admission in the universities asking that Ferris courses
of study be accepted as substitutes for the universities' studies.

He began a campaign to induce institutions of higher education to consider his students
acceptable.

The University of Michigan was the most reluctant to accept Ferris-educated students,
but eventually, it too accepted Ferris credits. In the second decade of the Ferris
Industrial School's existence, Ferris offered a college preparatory course based entirely
on University of Michigan requirements.

Rooming houses were the "dormitories" for Ferris students in the years before the
school built housing units.

W.N. Ferris also wrote to the private Michigan colleges, sending them his catalogs
and asking that his students be accepted on face value. As one college would agree,
he would tell the next college he wrote to that such and such a college or university
was accepting his students.

He asked for authority to issue Life certificates.

When it came time for him to get his son Carleton enrolled, Ferris wrote a long letter
to the University of Michigan explaining all of Carleton's good points, citing faculty
members at Ferris who had attended the university.

Carleton didn't attend the University of Michigan. Instead he enrolled at Purdue University
in Indiana. W.N. was not slow in writing to Cornell University at Ithaca, N.Y., (Ferris'
old neighborhood) asking that Ferris students be accepted there claiming that Purdue
University was accepting his students.

W.N. continued to bombard the University of Michigan with requests that the university
accept his students, pointing out that Cornell University and Purdue University were
accepting his students.

Before the turn of the century W.N. Ferris was also bombarding the superintendent
of public instruction's office for authority to give life certificates (the highest
teaching degree) to his graduates. Ferris did not hesitate to point out schools which
he considered offered less caliber of teaching than his did were allowed to offer
life certificates.

These Ferris students were just quick to "mug" for a camera as their counterparts
in later generations. The principals in this photo are unidentified, but the picture
was taken sometime in the 1890's in front of a downtown store.